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The Paradox of Predictivism Barnes Hardback Cambridge University Press

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The Paradox of Predictivism

This account of predictivism has considerable consequences for the realist/anti-realist debate.

Eric Christian Barnes (Author)

9780521879620, Cambridge University Press

Hardback, published 27 March 2008

276 pages

23.4 x 15.3 x 2.2 cm, 0.59 kg

An enduring question in the philosophy of science is the question of whether a scientific theory deserves more credit for its successful predictions than it does for accommodating data that was already known when the theory was developed. In The Paradox of Predictivism, Eric Barnes argues that the successful prediction of evidence testifies to the general credibility of the predictor in a way that evidence does not when the evidence is used in the process of endorsing the theory. He illustrates his argument with an important episode from nineteenth-century chemistry, Mendeleev's Periodic Law and its successful predictions of the existence of various elements. The consequences of this account of pred]

The Paradox of Predictivism Barnes Hardback Cambridge University Press

The Paradox of Predictivism

This account of predictivism has considerable consequences for the realist/anti-realist debate.

Eric Christian Barnes (Author)

9780521879620, Cambridge University Press

Hardback, published 27 March 2008

276 pages

23.4 x 15.3 x 2.2 cm, 0.59 kg

An enduring question in the philosophy of science is the question of whether a scientific theory deserves more credit for its successful predictions than it does for accommodating data that was already known when the theory was developed. In The Paradox of Predictivism, Eric Barnes argues that the successful prediction of evidence testifies to the general credibility of the predictor in a way that evidence does not when the evidence is used in the process of endorsing the theory. He illustrates his argument with an important episode from nineteenth-century chemistry, Mendeleev's Periodic Law and its successful predictions of the existence of various elements. The consequences of this account of pred]

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